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Wittgenstein and Psychoanalysis: Touchy Subjects: Wittgenstein’s ‘Freudianism’ and the Moral Dynamics of Repression

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Wittgenstein and Psychoanalysis: Touchy Subjects: Wittgenstein’s ‘Freudianism’ and the Moral Dynamics of Repression

Abstract

This article discusses the ‘Freudian’ dimension in Wittgenstein’s thinking, related to his insight into the fundamental role of repression in structuring our difficulties of understanding in everyday life and in theorising, individually andcollectively. I show the presence of the problematic of repression in Wittgenstein’s view of philosophising, and in his investigations of language. I also indicate how taking the moral-existential and relational character of repression seriously radically reframes the debate about the aim of, and the possibility of truth in, psychoanalysis, and how the trouble we repress basically has no fixed ‘content’ at all; rather, the ‘primal’ target of repression is the very openness between human beings

Keywords:

  • Keyword: L. Wittgenstein
  • Keyword: Moral dynamics
  • Keyword: Philosophical problems
  • Keyword: repression
  • Keyword: S. Freud

How to Cite:

Backström, J., (2014) “Wittgenstein and Psychoanalysis: Touchy Subjects: Wittgenstein’s ‘Freudianism’ and the Moral Dynamics of Repression”, The European Journal of Psychoanalysis 1(2), 1–23.

Rights: Incopyright

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  • Published on 2014-11-18
  • Pages: 1–23
  • Original Publication: The European Journal of Psychoanalysis
  • Original ISSN: 2284-1059
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